Cannes Lions
VMLY&R, São Paulo / SANTANDER / 2022
Awards:
Overview
Entries
Credits
Background
Over the years, Women’s Day has reflected the achievements of each timeThis time, like any other big brand committed to inclusion and equity, Santander Bank asked us for a campaign totally aligned to today’s narratives. But when we search for it, we realized that women didn’t want a campaign at all. They wanted more opportunities, more job, equal payment, respect.
Idea
Instead of ads, we created a product.
A first-ever line of credit for micro-entrepreneurs, using our entire media budget – and then adding more.
With the lowest interest rates in history: 15%.
Launched exclusively for one kind of entrepreneur: women.
The first of its kind in a country where women are the majority of the population, own businesses that are 21% more likely to perform above average than men-owned ones, and honor their financial commitments also better than men (McKinsey, 2019). But still get less credit from banks and earn 32% less than men.
Strategy
Since all our budget was transformed in funds to offer credit for women, we accessed the hard data that Santander already had available of their 25 million clients along with other millions of potential clients.
Then, we chose to focus on the almost 25% of Brazilian women microentrepreneurs who earn less than US$85 a month. Becoming not only an innovative financial product that addresses gender inequality, but also an important tool for social transformation.
Execution
By crossing global data of gender (women) and location (low-income areas), we targeted this group of microentrepreneurs women with simple text messages, besides an internal communication at Santander’s branches.
The bank trained its staff on how to approach these women once they get in touch with Santander. For instance, while banks are used to asking about their husband’s job or income, in the Santander Ela program, we would be interested in the woman payment historic only. This way, all the process could be inclusive and respectful, and women could feel empowered.
Santander also invited big leaders – all women – of the country’s economy to talk about our subject in a series of debates streamed Live on YouTube. From the CEO of Brazil’s biggest ecommerce or the CEO of Goldman Sachs Brazil, to the CFO of the Brazilian Development Bank and the CFO of the Brazilian Petro Company.
Outcome
100,000 women joined Santander Ela on the launch day only.
35% weren’t Santander clients until then – and became new clients of the bank.
All funds available were lent out within a week in the program’s both editions: US$ 250 million in the first year and impressive 70% more in the second year.
This more than doubled the average number of women borrowing from the bank – from 20% to 44%.
We got the attention of The World Bank also, who asked to become a partner – expanding the project for the second year.
A big coverage from both the specialized and the general media. And an inspiration to the competition – who has created similar credit lines for women microentrepreneurs after Santander Ela’s launch.
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